A popular Mormon podcaster who supports gay rights and the ordination of women was excommunicated by the church this week. He is the second high-profile church member to be excommunicated in the past year.
John Dehlin, 45, confirmed his excommunication from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints on Tuesday. He said he had refused to back down from his support of same-sex marriage and the ordination of women, or stop expressing misgivings about key tenets of the religion on his “Mormon Stories” podcast.
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“I believe that LDS Church members should be able to publicly discuss doubts and disbelief without the fear of church discipline,” Dehlin wrote in a statement obtained by NBC News. He said the church “needs to find better ways to support the open discussion of doubts and disbelief within the lived LDS context.”
The Mormon church, based in Salt Lake City, pointed out in a statement Tuesday that those positions were contrary to its teachings but were not mentioned in Dehlin’s formal excommunication letter, delivered to him Feb. 9.
Dehlin publicly released a copy of the letter, written by his Logan, Utah, church leader, known as a stake president. The letter announced Dehlin’s excommunication “for conduct contrary to the laws and order of the Church.” Stake President Bryan C. King cited three violations: disputing the nature of God and Jesus Christ, making statements calling into question the church’s key texts, and making “statements and teachings that reject The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints a being the true Church with power and authority from God.”
King, in his letter, stressed the church’s support of free speech. “But you do not have the right to remain a member of the Church in good standing while openly and publicly trying to convince others that Church teachings are in error,” King wrote.









